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Image provided by: Guilderland Public Library
THE ENTERPRISE, ALT^f!<> N T, N ' Y - FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1957 PAGE THREB To Hear President Women from this \area in arfen dance at the fifth annual• ReXS can women's conference in Hotel Statler, Washington, D. C, will hear addresses by. President f>wteht D Eisenhower and other speaker! Wen-' Some T^n ,th ° Federal G °™enl borne 1,500 women are expected in the national capital for the ?hree-day *in™°\ t9t andmg women's meetings since the inception of the Republican Admiration in 1953. Miss Bertha «™*\ P D 8 '- assistant Republican na- tional chairman, says that .the con- ference will prepare women leaders lor their role in disseminating infor- mation on public issues and in the activities in the 1958 Congressional campaign. Senator Styles' Bridges of New Hampshire, chairman.of the Senate Kepubhcan policy committee, will be among the speakers at a dinner April A as well as the youngest Republican Representative in Congress, Edward H. May, Jr., of Connecticut. Con- ference activities will begin April 1 with a reception in honor of wives of cabinet members and wives of little cabinet officials. . Board Names Teachers The Bethlehem Board of Education has appointed two new teachers for the 1957-58 school year. They are Daniel Ganeles, Rens-, selaer, now teaching a t Albany State College for Teachers, who will in- struct the citizen education class-in senior high school, and Alice Watson, Delmar, who has taught in Selkirk, Philmont and Greenville and will teach sixth grade at Clarksville Elementary school. ' To Direct Carnival Planning Harold Willard has been named chairman of the Delmar Fire depart- ment's annual carnival, which will be staged on the fire hall grounds June 5 through 8. Donald Wright will be co-chairman. The carnival will feature a parade and field day, and a variety of kid- die rides, including a miniature rail- road. Blake Case has been renominated for chief of the department, heading a slate of nominees for April 4 elec- tions. Other candidates include: Ed Pakenham, III,, and Charles Sutter, first assistant chief; Paken- ham and Wright, second assistant chief; Jack Leonardo, Bill Webb, and Bill Hermance, third assistant chief; Willard and Wright, captain; Ckude Bonaparte, Joseph Thomas and Wil- lard, 'first lieutenant, and Charles Degrusk and Thomas, second lieuten- ant. Comfort Is. Our. Busmen\ GIVE MORE COMFORT TO PROBLEM FEET For Cramped Tow • For Bunloni, • For Aches ft Strain EXCLUSIVELY AT' SHOE SPECIALIST Optn Thursday Till 9 P.M. Daily 9 A.M. to J P.M. MEMBER of PARK and SHOP 81 Chapel St. — Opp. Ten Eyck ALBANY, N. Y. B^BVisit Your Foot Doctor^—,. Salk Clinic Postponed The Albany County Health De- partment has informed the Bethle- hem Central School 'District the Salk vaccine clinic scheduled for Apr. 2 has been postponed because of a lack of serum. But the department assured dis- trict nurses the clinic \is definitely not cancelled.\ Mrs. Dorothy Soren- son, 'Hamagrael Elementary school nurse who is helping make arrange- ments,' said she was assured the clinic would be rescheduled. She said it appears certain the Shots wduld toe administered well before summer vacation. The clinic was to have been held alt ithe senior high school os final chance for first and second shots for district youngsters under 19 and expetanlt anocthers. More than 250 residents are eligible for free vac- cine. Decision Delayed Conflicting testimony given at a hearing last week will delay a de- cision by the Bethlehem Board of Appeals on' whether a zoning vari- ance will be granted to permit a seven-store shopping center to be built in Slingerlands. Chairman Hammond Robertson said the board will study \a pile of conflicting statements\ taped at the two-andK>ne j ha!f -Jhour town hall, ses- sion and hopes a verdict will be reached at the Apr. 3 meeting. Rob- ert C. Conahan, Slingerlands, asked the 'board . to overrule a decision against the center made by the town board in July, 1955. The appeals board originally hoped it could decide within a few days, Mr. Robertson said. APPOINTED — Austin Miller, 1305 New Scotland Ave., Slingerlands, has been named manager of the service and installation department of Main Brothers Oil Company, 318 Delaware Ave., Delmar. .E. mi^L. 50 STOCKS WITH 50-YEAR DIVIDEND RECORDS YIELDS UP TO 7.4% -^-SELLING UNDER $30 WE have compiled th'js dREE^Hst of 50 stocks that have paid yearly dividends for 50 ye$rst Send for yours today. -• n^^ : ^^^0^^C^^qnipony •• - — • SUT1^1ROS.*CO. Member N. Y. Stock Exchange and other principal exchanges J. ERWIN HYNEY, Mgr. Phone 5-4546 HOME SAVINGS BANK BLDG., 11 No. Pearl St., Albany, N. Y. Name .. Dept. K Address AY 7 City State Delmar Reformed Church Rev. Dr. Leroy C. Brandt, pastor. Sunday, March 29th: 9:45 a, m. Sunday school. 10 a. m. Arnold Adult Bible class. 11 a. m. Nursery and advanced kindergarten. 11 a. m. Morning worship. Ser- mon, \Mirrors For Men — t An Un- derstanding Man.\ Children's story, \Becoming Beautiful.\ Music: Pre- lude, Cantabile, Franck; quartette, \Just As I Am,\ Maunder; offertory anthem, Stainer; postlude, Andante, Voeckmar. 5:30 p. m. New members' class. 6:30 p. -m. Youth choir. 7:15 p. m. Youth Fellowship. Dr. Brandt will speak on \Church Voca- tions.\ Tuesday, 8 p. m.—The Women's League. Devotions, Mrs. John Kra- mer. Dr. Allen Benton, State Col- lege for Teachers, will give an il- lustrated talk on \Birds of Our Homes and Gardens.\ Hostess will be Mrs. William Whan and Mrs. Al- lison Vedder. Wednesday at 8 p. m., Lenten serv- ice. Dr. Frederick Zimmerman, for- mer pastor of First Church in Albany and president of the General Synod of the Reformed Church in America, will speak. Ladies' Aid will meet on Thurs- day. The program will be \An Easter Message\ by Dr. Brandt. Mrs. William, Thomson will lead devotions at 2 p. m„ Luncheon at 1 p. m. Friday, 7:25 to 7:45 a. m. — High school students Lenten service. ie Baseball Ifcistry Scheduled A PROFESSIONAL MAN appraises Killip Dry Cleaning Discerning people are not interested in how. \cheaply\ they can buy dry cleaning. What they want is the finest workmanship their cleaning doll- ar can buy. . Folks who entru,st their suits, dresses and other wearables to Killip often tell the \Killip Quality\ story Better than we could tell it ourselves. For example—this week we received an unsolicited let- ter from a professional man whose observations we set forth below: ' Gentlemen: For quite a-while I have been in- tending r to write, complimenting you for yoiit excellent dry cleaning work, along with the repairs that you do on\ small tears, loose buttons, etc. Th€se repairs may seem like minor ii&msj but ikef certainly mean a lot to customers like me. AH of my suits have gone to you since I \discovered\ you. Your work has always btien A-i. You have also moth-proofed my wool suits and wa- terproofed a top coat'. Your laundry work, too, .has always been just as •consistently good in the JiO-odd years I have been, dealing with you. Congratulations again. (Name on request) 74.80 OgiiN it, ALBANY * IN TROY CAU ENTERPRISE 9624 PICKUP IN ALBANY AND ALL CAPITAL AREA SUBURBS Re#ite#L# for the Tri-Village Little League will be held March 30 .and April,f/M 9 ;30 a. m. at Bethle- hem Geh'traJ: Junior High school, ac- cording ti>,i8<* ept Rice, president of the board of directors. Tryouts-are,scheduled for April 13, 20 and 27* .also at the junior high. Rice announced that ground has been broken .for a new building at the -league's-.,Magee Field, to house the refresninent stand and furnish storage space. Water is now avail- able at the\ field following recent completion' of a well. An additional'field, adjoining the present one\ Will' be completed before opening day, for use by the minor teams. Previously all games had been played on one diamond, result- ing in copgijsted scheduling, Rice said. . ., ,., The board!;#so approved two new policies. Under one, each boy will play a minihitto of 36 innings during the • total Reason of 120 innings.. Under the second, the season will be split, with *he half-season winners matched' for the pennant. This year's line-up will include teams sponsored by Crannell's Pat- terson's Carroll's, Mullen's, Main Bros, and Studlefs. Grass Fires Bring Wanting of Chief Four weekend grass fires have caused Delmar Chief Blake to issue a two-point warning to residents. \Don't leave burning paper, and do all burning Saturdays if possible,\ he said. The chieS explained that the fires were started when papers, left to burn near Khe sidewalk, were blown on nearby grass while they were unattended. Volunteers have a better chance of arriving quickly and in force Saturdays, he added, with many hot working that day. Other iBetMeheni'volunteer depart- ments also were Mt during the past days by grass fires. No major property damage was reported. School Carnival April 6 The Future Business Leaders of America chapter and the Girls Ath- letic association of the senior high school wiill' cooperate in sponsoring a club carnival April 6 at the school. Each club will sponsor a games booth, with proceeds to be used for individual club programs. Bonnie' Scottt and Gilroore are co-chairmen. Mrs .Violet C. Alexander Mrs. Violet Curtin Alexander, 9 Southwood Dr., Slingerlands, died on Mar. 22, She was the widow of Dudley Alexander. Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Amelia B. Curtin, Slingerlands; a daughter, Mrs. George Friedle, also of Slingerlands; a son, Gerald Alex- ander, River Edge, N. J., and a sis- ter, Mrs. Amy Parchment, New York city. Funeral services were in Tetobutt Ohapel, Delmar. The Rev. James R. Rhodes, pastor of Gorrimunity Metho- dist^ church, Slingerlands, officiated. Burial was in Bethiehem cemetery, Elsmere. PTA BENEFIT GAME The second annual PTA benefit game between the Greenville Central school faculty and PTA fathers will be played in the Greenville Central school on Friday, April 5, at 8 p. m. Refreshments will be served by the senior class. Dancing will follow the game, until 11:30 p. m. Mrs. Maude % Services for Mrs. Maude Hunger- ford Fix, 85, a former resident of Albany and Slingerlands who died in Temple City, Calif, were held Mar. 21 in. Glendale, Calif. Burial was in Giendale. Wife of, the late John Fix, she is survived tjy a son, Arthur Fix; three grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. \England and America are two countries separated by the same lan- guage.\ — Alec. Guinegs. Subscribe to tS'Altamont Enter- prise — $3.00 per year. '•••••--• ••••»-• • Red Cross Plans To Plans to conduct a 10-day aqua- tic school an this area have been re- vealed toy ifthe American Red Cross. Arrangements are completed to con- duct this school for training Red Cross water safety instructors at Camp Orinsekwa - Sonnikwa, East Berne, for the 10-day period from June 13 [through June 23. Mrs. Jerome R.,Walton, chairman of the Albany County Red Cross water safety committee, 'said, in an- nouncing this aquatic school, 'that the local chapter is very pleased with this development. For the past several years the National Aquatic School for New York state was held at Silver Lake Institute, Perry, N.Y., and ithis necessitated considerable travel on the part Of Albany county instructors who attended this school. Mrs. Walton expressed the feeling rttat a National' Aquatic School in our own location would offer many advantages to our local water safe- ty program. The school will toe directed by Har- old M. Bassett, safety services rep- resentative of (the National Red Cross, and will accommodate up to 200 students from all over New York state who will take 10 days of ex- tensive training in iswiimming, life saving, Iboatln'g and canoeing,' and first aid 'under the direction of a staff of 25 faculty members who rep- resent the very best in the aquatic field in the eastern United States. Most of Ithe students who attend the schools each'year are being train- ed for leadership positions in com- munity, camp and agency swimming programs. Students stay alt the school for, the full iCMday .(period and a fee of $50 is. lefo&rged for their board, 'room and taiifiort at the school. The local chapter's water safety committee planS to .offer several scholarships to' outstanding volun- teer water safeftjf instructors in (the. Albany area. The National Aqua- tic School offers a wonderful oppor- tunity tbo tooth professionals' arid vol- unteers in the water safety field to receive ilhe very best instruction and training in aquafics: Anyone inter- ested in' IfUrther. information On the school is urged to call .the water safelby service at the Red Cross chap- ter in Albany. Fire Auxiliary To Meet The monthly 5 rrieejihg of the Ladies' Auxiliary of •Jhe McKowhville Fire' department will be held Wednesday, April 3, ait 8 f>. m. at. 'the fire hall. The\ president,' Mrs. Thoffi&s H. Park- er, will .jj>re^iae. Final plans and preparations will toe made for serv- ing the annual dinner for the men of th§ fire department the following night. i j jiAm KEEP THIS AD! Over 20,666 Arthritic arid Rheu- matic Sufferers have taken this Medicine since it has been on the market. It Is inexpensive, gan be iikhft ifi the home. FOP -Free lh» fdrmatloh, give name and.address to P. 0. Box 1012, Hot Springs, Arkansas! ^, u V • ^^^!i^;*•,• , ' '.# • the expert on THE MAN ON THE LADDER KNOWS WW MUCH THIS PROTECTION CAN MEAN A fireman sees manv people lose all their\ValtiaDle\pafe'rr?ud jewelryv FIRE has destroyed wills . - . sayings 6onds .-.-. mortgages -.TTT. stock certificates arid insurance policies, as well as priceless jewelry and Ijeirjoonjs, Invest in a Safe\ Deposit BoVat National Commercial Bank to'day.* Youc dividends will>e, - completejgrotection of.nlflaBles aod, - peace of mjftdi A large vault at oilr Main Office provides stofage~space for bulkier Valuables sncb as silverware, paintings, tapestrjes, oj_r^e.boo>,^Ou^uc.k will call <&t yourJjora_e for items^ij^orr*,' AlTAMONf Cobleskill Delmar : a , MEMBER FEbERAL dEPOSlT INSURANCE 66RpRAffON; Twenty-two Offices Serving 'tej^si^|fe;1pi^ t*m in in11 iiiir\\\'\\\7 ~-'~*-